老虎机稳赢方法

Chetan Singh > Chetan's Quotes

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  • #1
    David   Epstein
    “The same medicine should not be prescribed for every athlete. For some, less training is the right medicine.”
    David Epstein, The Sports Gene: Inside the Science of Extraordinary Athletic Performance

  • #2
    Robert Greene
    “Your fears are a kind of prison that confines you within a limited range of action. The less you fear, the more power you will have and the more fully you will live.”
    Robert Greene, The 50th Law: Overcoming Adversity Through Fearlessness

  • #3
    Robert Greene
    “Understand: people will constantly attack you in life. One of their main weapons will be to instill in you doubts about yourself 鈥 your worth, your abilities, your potential. They will often disguise this as their objective opinion, but invariably it has a political purpose 鈥 they want to keep you down.”
    Robert Greene, The 50th Law: Overcoming Adversity Through Fearlessness

  • #4
    Nassim Nicholas Taleb
    “The irony of the process of thought control: the more energy you put into trying to control your ideas and what you think about, the more your ideas end up controlling you.”
    Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder

  • #5
    “Once a goal becomes activated, it trumps all others and begins to drive our perceptions, our thoughts, our attitudes,鈥 as John Bargh, a psychologist at Yale University, told me.”
    Benedict Carey, How We Learn: The Surprising Truth About When, Where, and Why It Happens

  • #6
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “To know what people really think, pay attention to what they do, rather than what they say.”
    Descartes

  • #7
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “It is not enough to have a good mind; the main thing is to use it well.”
    Descartes

  • #8
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “Except our own thoughts, there is nothing absolutely in our power.”
    Ren茅 Descartes

  • #9
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “And thus, the actions of life often not allowing any delay, it is a truth very certain that, when it is not in our power to determine the most true opinions we ought to follow the most probable.”
    Rene Descartes, Discourse on Method

  • #10
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “Common sense is the most widely shared commodity in the world, for every man is convinced that he is well supplied with it.”
    Rene Descartes

  • #11
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “Doubt is the origin of wisdom”
    Rene Descartes

  • #12
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “Conquer yourself rather than the world.”
    Ren茅 Descartes

  • #13
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “I suppose therefore that all things I see are illusions; I believe that nothing has ever existed of everything my lying memory tells me. I think I have no senses. I believe that body, shape, extension, motion, location are functions. What is there then that can be taken as true? Perhaps only this one thing, that nothing at all is certain.”
    Rene Descartes

  • #14
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “If you would be a real seeker after truth, it is necessary that at least once in your life you doubt, as far as possible, all things.”
    Ren茅 Descartes

  • #15
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “Cogito ergo sum. (I think, therefore I am.)
    Ren茅 Descartes

  • #16
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “The reading of all good books is like conversation with the finest men of past centuries.”
    Ren茅 Descartes

  • #17
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “I think; therefore I am.”
    Rene Descartes

  • #18
    Ren茅 Descartes
    “The greatest minds are capable of the greatest vices as well as of the greatest virtues.”
    Rene Descartes

  • #19
    Robert Greene
    “You like to imagine yourself in control of your fate, consciously planning the course of your life as best you can. But you are largely unaware of how deeply your emotions dominate you. They make you veer toward ideas that soothe your ego. They make you look for evidence that confirms what you already want to believe. They make you see what you want to see, depending on your mood, and this disconnect from reality is the source of the bad decisions and negative patterns that haunt your life. Rationality is the ability to counteract these emotional effects, to think instead of react, to open your mind to what is really happening, as opposed to what you are feeling. It does not come naturally; it is a power we must cultivate, but in doing so we realize our greatest potential.”
    Robert Greene, The Laws of Human Nature

  • #20
    Robert Greene
    “Man will only become better when you make him see what he is like. 鈥擜nton Chekhov”
    Robert Greene, The Laws of Human Nature

  • #21
    Robert Greene
    “Learn to question yourself: Why this anger or resentment? Where does this incessant need for attention come from? Under such scrutiny, your emotions will lose their hold on you. You will begin to think for yourself instead of reacting to what others give you.”
    Robert Greene, The Laws of Human Nature

  • #22
    Robert Greene
    “Not to become someone else, but to be more thoroughly yourself.”
    Robert Greene, The Laws of Human Nature

  • #23
    Nassim Nicholas Taleb
    “Probability is not a mere computation of odds on the dice or more complicated variants; it is the acceptance of the lack of certainty in our knowledge and the development of methods for dealing with our ignorance.”
    Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets

  • #23
    Nassim Nicholas Taleb
    “Reality is far more vicious than Russian roulette. First, it delivers the fatal bullet rather infrequently, like a revolver that would have hundreds, even thousands of chambers instead of six. After a few dozen tries, one forgets about the existence of a bullet, under a numbing false sense of security. Second, unlike a well-defined precise game like Russian roulette, where the risks are visible to anyone capable of multiplying and dividing by six, one does not observe the barrel of reality. One is capable of unwittingly playing Russian roulette - and calling it by some alternative 鈥渓ow risk鈥 game.”
    Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Fooled by Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets

  • #24
    Carol S. Dweck
    “important achievements require a clear focus, all-out effort, and a bottomless trunk full of strategies.”
    Carol S. Dweck, Mindset: How You Can Fulfil Your Potential

  • #25
    Carol S. Dweck
    “So the idea is not only to make a growth-mindset plan, but also to visualize, in a concrete way, how you鈥檙e going to carry it out.”
    Carol S. Dweck, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success

  • #26
    Friedrich Nietzsche
    “But it is the same with man as with the tree. The more he seeks to rise into the height and light, the more vigorously do his roots struggle earthword, downword, into the dark, the deep - into evil.”
    Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra

  • #27
    Rodrigo Quian Quiroga
    “What matters is not how much we remember, but how we remember. As I see it, intelligence is closely related to creativity, to noticing something new, to making unexpected connections between disparate facts. Isaac Newton鈥檚 genius consisted of realizing that what makes an apple fall from a tree is the same force that keeps the moon in its orbit around the earth: gravity. Centuries later, in his general theory of relativity, Albert Einstein uncovered another astounding relationship when he noted that the effect of the force of gravity is indistinguishable from the acceleration of a spaceship in outer space or the tug we feel in an elevator when it starts to move. Attempting to memorize facts by rote does nothing more than distract our attention from what really matters, the deeper understanding required to establish meaning and notice connections鈥攖hat which constitutes the basis of intelligence. The method of loci does nothing to help us understand the things we memorize; it is just a formula for memorization that, in fact, competes against comprehension. As we saw in the previous chapter, Shereshevskii was able to memorize a list effortlessly using the method of loci, but was incapable of grasping its content enough to pick out the liquids from the list or, on another occasion, to realize that he had memorized a sequence of consecutive numbers. Using the method of loci to store these lists left Shereshevskii no room to make any of the categorizations that we perform unconsciously (person, animal, liquid, etc.) or to find basic patterns in a list of numbers. To be creative and intelligent, we must go beyond merely remembering and undertake completely different processes: we must assimilate concepts and derive meaning. Focusing on memorization techniques limits our ability to understand, classify, contextualize, and associate. Like memorization, these processes also help to secure memories, but in a more useful and elaborate way; these are precisely the processes that should be developed and encouraged by the educational system.”
    Rodrigo Quian Quiroga, The Forgetting Machine: Memory, Perception, and the "Jennifer Aniston Neuron"



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